Analysis of Lines In Memory Of Edmund Morris



Dear Morris--here is your letter--
Can my answer reach you now?
Fate has left me your debtor,
You will remember how;
For I went away to Nantucket,
And you to the Isle of Orleans,
And when I was dawdling and dreaming
Over the ways and means
Of answering, the power was denied me,
Fate frowned and took her stand;
I have your unanswered letter
Here in my hand.
This--in your famous scribble,
It was ever a cryptic fist,
Cuneiform or Chaldaic
Meanings held in a mist.

Dear Morris, (now I'm inditing
And poring over your script)
I gather from the writing,
The coin that you had flipt,
Turned tails; and so you compel me
To meet you at Touchwood Hills:
Or, mayhap, you are trying to tell me
The sum of a painter's ills:
Is that Phimister Proctor
Or something about a doctor?
Well, nobody knows, but Eddie,
Whatever it is I'm ready.

For our friendship was always fortunate
In its greetings and adieux,
Nothing flat or importunate,
Nothing of the misuse
That comes of the constant grinding
Of one mind on another.
So memory has nothing to smother,
But only a few things captured
On the wing, as it were, and enraptured.
Yes, Morris, I am inditing--
Answering at last it seems,
How can you read the writing
In the vacancy of dreams?

I would have you look over my shoulder
Ere the long, dark year is colder,
And mark that as memory grows older,
The brighter it pulses and gleams.
And if I should try to render
The tissues of fugitive splendour
That fled down the wind of living,
Will they read it some day in the future,
And be conscious of an awareness
In our old lives, and the bareness
Of theirs, with the newest passions
In the last fad of the fashions?

* * * * *

How often have we risen without daylight
When the day star was hidden in mist,
When the dragon-fly was heavy with dew and sleep,
And viewed the miracle pre-eminent, matchless,
The prelusive light that quickens the morning.
O crystal dawn, how shall we distill your virginal freshness
When you steal upon a land that man has not sullied with his
intrusion,
When the aboriginal shy dwellers in the broad solitudes
Are asleep in their innumerable dens and night haunts
Amid the dry ferns, in the tender nests
Pressed into shape by the breasts of the Mother birds?
How shall we simulate the thrill of announcement
When lake after lake lingering in the starlight
Turn their faces towards you,
And are caressed with the salutation of colour?

How shall we transmit in tendril-like images,
The tenuous tremor in the tissues of ether,
Before the round of colour buds like the dome of a shrine,
The preconscious moment when love has fluttered in the bosom,
Before it begins to ache?

How often have we seen the even
Melt into the liquidity of twilight,
With passages of Titian splendour,
Pellucid preludes, exquisitely tender,
Where vanish and revive, thro' veils of the ashes of roses,
The crystal forms the breathless sky discloses.

The new moon a slender thing,
In a snood of virgin light,
She seemed all shy on venturing
Into the vast night.

Her own land and folk were afar,
She must have gone astray,
But the gods had given a silver star,
To be with her on the way.

* * * * *

I can feel the wind on the prairie
And see the bunch-grass wave,
And the sunlights ripple and vary
The hill with Crowfoot's grave,
Where he 'pitched off' for the last time
In sight of the Blackfoot Crossing,
Where in the sun for a pastime
You marked the site of his tepee
With a circle of stones. Old Napiw
Gave you credit for that day.
And well I recall the weirdness
Of that evening at Qu'Appelle,
In the wigwam with old Sakimay,
The keen, acrid smell,
As the kinnikinick was burning;
The planets outside were turning,
And the little splints of poplar
Flared with a thin, gold flame.
He showed us his painted robe
Where in primitive pigments
He had drawn his feats and his forays,
And told us the legend
Of the man without a name,
The hated Blackfoot,
How he lured the warriors,
The young men, to the foray
And they never returned.
Only their ghosts
Goaded by the Blackfoot
Mounted on stallions:
In the night time
He drove the stallions
Reeking into the camp;
The women gasped and whispered,
The children cowered and crept,
And the old men shuddered
Where they slept.
When Sakimay looked forth
He saw the Blackfoot,
And the ghosts of the warriors,
And t


Scheme ABABCDEXFGAGHIEI EXECFJFJAAFF XDCXEAAKKELEL AAALAAEAMDDD NIODEMPXDXXXXNXA XAXXX XNAAPP ENEN QRQR FSFSTETOORMHFXEEAUXXXXUVWRXXVDTDXKXKXXVWF
Poetic Form
Metre 11011110 1110111 1111110 110101 111011010 011011100 011110010 100101 11000101011 110101 1111010 1011 1011010 11100101 10011 101001 110111 0101011 1101010 011111 11011011 111111 111110111 0110101 11110 11001010 111110 1011110 1101011100 011001 10111 101001 11101010 1111010 1100110110 11001110 1011100010 110111 1001111 1111010 0010011 1111110110 10111110 0111100110 01011001 01111110 0111001 11101110 1111110010 011011010 01011001 11101010 00111010 1 1101110011 101111001 101011101101 01010011001 011110010 110111101110010 111010111111011 010 1001001100011 10101010001011 0101100101 101110110101 111100011010 11101100001 1110011 010110111 11101011100 010010001110 0101111101101 0110111100010 0110111 110111010 1010010011 11001101 1110010 110001111010110 01010101010 0110101 0011101 11111100 01011 01101001 111101 1011100101 1110101 1 111011010 010111 00110010 01111 11111011 0110110 1001101 1101111 10101111 1110111 0111010 111011 0010111 01101 101110 01011010 00101110 110111 1111101 1010010 111110110 011010 1010101 0101 1110100 0111010 011001 1011 10101 10110 0011 11010 100101 0101010 010101 001110 111 1111 1101 00110100 01
Closest metre Iambic tetrameter
Characters 4,154
Words 784
Sentences 23
Stanzas 12
Stanza Lengths 16, 12, 13, 12, 1, 16, 5, 6, 4, 4, 1, 41
Lines Amount 131
Letters per line (avg) 26
Words per line (avg) 6
Letters per stanza (avg) 281
Words per stanza (avg) 65
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Submitted on May 13, 2011

Modified on March 05, 2023

3:56 min read
128

Duncan Campbell Scott

Duncan Campbell Scott was a Canadian bureaucrat, Canadian poet and prose writer. more…

All Duncan Campbell Scott poems | Duncan Campbell Scott Books

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